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Improving Health and Well-Being of People With Post–COVID-19 Consequences in South Africa: Situation Analysis and Pilot Intervention Design

Improving Health and Well-Being of People With Post–COVID-19 Consequences in South Africa: Situation Analysis and Pilot Intervention Design

The qualitative study included semistructured in-depth interviews with health care workers who manage COVID-19 patients and focus group discussions (FGDs) with individuals who had post–COVID-19 symptoms. Separate interviews were used with health care workers to allow in-depth conversation on each discipline, and FGDs were used with patients to allow a broad conversation flow of COVID-19 reflection and to encourage group sharing (see Multimedia Appendices 2 and 3).

Nicole Audrey Glover, Farzana Sathar, Pride Mokome, Nkululeko Mathabela, Sipokazi Taleni, Sarah Alexandra van Blydenstein, Anna-Maria Mekota, Salome Charalambous, Andrea Rachow, Olena Ivanova

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e58436

Identifying Unmet Needs of Informal Dementia Caregivers in Clinical Practice: User-Centered Development of a Digital Assessment Tool

Identifying Unmet Needs of Informal Dementia Caregivers in Clinical Practice: User-Centered Development of a Digital Assessment Tool

EUROCARE: A cross-national study of co-resident spouse carers for people with Alzheimer’s disease: II—A qualitative A systematic review of quantitative and qualitative studies Evaluation of a digital self-management platform for patients with chronic illness in primary care: qualitative Reference 56: Older adults and hackathons: a qualitative studyqualitative

Olga A Biernetzky, Jochen René Thyrian, Melanie Boekholt, Matthias Berndt, Wolfgang Hoffmann, Stefan J Teipel, Ingo Kilimann

JMIR Aging 2025;8:e59942

Older Adults’ Perspectives on Participating in a Synchronous Online Exercise Program: Qualitative Study

Older Adults’ Perspectives on Participating in a Synchronous Online Exercise Program: Qualitative Study

This qualitative study was part of an 8-week community-based, pilot RCT [17]. An interpretive descriptive design explored community-dwelling older adults’ experiences and perceptions of exercise, in general, and of the synchronous online exercise program [18]. Interpretive description offers a flexible approach to analyzing qualitative data within medical education research, as it can explore individuals’ experiences while producing practical clinical outcomes [19].

Giulia Coletta, Kenneth S Noguchi, Kayla Beaudoin, Angelica McQuarrie, Ada Tang, Rebecca Ganann, Stuart M Phillips, Meridith Griffin

JMIR Aging 2025;8:e66473

Automatic Human Embryo Volume Measurement in First Trimester Ultrasound From the Rotterdam Periconception Cohort: Quantitative and Qualitative Evaluation of Artificial Intelligence

Automatic Human Embryo Volume Measurement in First Trimester Ultrasound From the Rotterdam Periconception Cohort: Quantitative and Qualitative Evaluation of Artificial Intelligence

We assessed performance through both quantitative and qualitative analyses. Quantitatively, we compared volume differences between AI and VR segmentations and examined factors influencing segmentation accuracy. Qualitatively, expert raters visually evaluated the segmentations using a newly developed protocol, which also enabled us to estimate the time-saving potential of the AI approach.

Wietske A P Bastiaansen, Stefan Klein, Batoul Hojeij, Eleonora Rubini, Anton H J Koning, Wiro Niessen, Régine P M Steegers-Theunissen, Melek Rousian

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e60887

Development of a Framework for Youth- and Family-Specific Engagement in Research: Proposal for a Scoping Review and Qualitative Descriptive Study

Development of a Framework for Youth- and Family-Specific Engagement in Research: Proposal for a Scoping Review and Qualitative Descriptive Study

This study will be conducted in 2 phases, with phase 1 consisting of a scoping review and phase 2 consisting of a qualitative descriptive study. Integrated knowledge translation (i KT) is defined as a collaborative relationship between researchers and relevant knowledge users as partners that facilitates mutually beneficial decision-making related to a study or research program [25].

Sarah E P Munce, Clementine Jarrett, Vjura Senthilnathan, Dorothy Luong, Brooke Allemang, Katherine Bailey, Elaine Biddiss, Maria T Britto, Francine Buchanan, Christine Cassidy, Andrea Cross, Jessie Cunningham, Gina Dimitropoulos, Scott E Hadland, Monika Kastner, Tieghan Killackey, Kristina Kokorelias, Colin Macarthur, Samantha Micsinszki, Chavon Niles, F Virginia Wright, Alene Toulany

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e65733

Patterns of Internet Use in People Diagnosed With Severe Mental Illness: Qualitative Interview Study

Patterns of Internet Use in People Diagnosed With Severe Mental Illness: Qualitative Interview Study

A qualitative study of digital exclusion in 20 mental health service users (half of whom had psychosis) explored the factors that drive digital exclusion, highlighting a perceived lack of knowledge, being unable to access the necessary technology and services owing to personal circumstances, and the barriers presented by mental health difficulties [10].

Ruth Wadman, Lauren Walker, Olivia Taylor, Paul Heron, Elizabeth Newbronner, Panagiotis Spanakis, Suzanne Crosland, Emily Jane Peckham

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e55072

Patient Acceptability and Technical Reliability of Wearable Devices Used for Monitoring People With Parkinson Disease: Survey Study

Patient Acceptability and Technical Reliability of Wearable Devices Used for Monitoring People With Parkinson Disease: Survey Study

Conducting qualitative interviews with people with PD who had used multimodal sensors, including a wearable device, the wrist-worn wearable was the least acceptable, in comparison to cameras and passive ambient sensors [10]. Another small study explored perceptions of wearing devices in the home versus in public and found no differences in acceptability between these settings and acceptance of long-term symptom monitoring through wrist-worn devices [11].

Tasmin Alanna Rookes, Amit Batla, Megan Armstrong, Gareth Ambler, Kate Walters, Anette Schrag

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e63704

Exploring the Views of Dermatologists, General Practitioners, and Melanographers on the Use of AI Tools in the Context of Good Decision-Making When Detecting Melanoma: Qualitative Interview Study

Exploring the Views of Dermatologists, General Practitioners, and Melanographers on the Use of AI Tools in the Context of Good Decision-Making When Detecting Melanoma: Qualitative Interview Study

Studies using qualitative methods, such as focus groups, have allowed for more in-depth descriptions of clinician views on the potential benefits, barriers, and preconditions of using AI for skin cancer detection [16] in ways that elicit more detailed information about the reasoning and beliefs underlying clinician attitudes.

Brad Partridge, Nicole Gillespie, H Peter Soyer, Victoria Mar, Monika Janda

JMIR Dermatol 2025;8:e63923